Zapruder

Accession Number
2008/2.214

Title
Zapruder

Artist(s)
John Waters

Object Creation Date
1995

Medium & Support
chromogenic print on paper

Dimensions
7 1/8 in. x 86 1/2 in. ( 18.1 cm x 219.71 cm )

Credit Line
Gift of Stephen and Sandra Abramson

Label copy
All movies are too long. Let's go back and reduce all movies to just the good parts.
-John Waters
Zapruder is derived from Waters’ 1967 film Eat Your Makeup. Waters’ first quasi-narrative cinematic effort—shot on Waters’ parents’ front lawn with a newly purchased 16mm silent camera—Eat Your Makeup tells the story of a disturbed couple who kidnap three models and force them to eat makeup and “model themselves to death.” In what has become the film’s most infamous sequence, Waters regular Divine imagines herself as Jackie Kennedy, riding in the motorcade through Dealey Plaza. Produced only a few years after the event, Waters’ gender-bending reenactment of the Kennedy assassination was at the time considered especially tasteless and the film was screened only once at a local Baltimore church.
Zapruder’s twenty-four frames (the same number of frames in a single second of sound film). By extracting still images from a longer film, Waters both alludes to the process of editing that structures most films and, at the same time, encourages us to consider how each of us creates our own personal narratives as we perceive, isolate, and interpret the plethora of images that constantly bombard us.
Jacob Proctor, Associate Curator of Modern & Contemporary Art
---------------------
6/28/10
John Waters (United States, born 1946)
Zapruder
1995
24 chromogenic prints, in artist’s frame
Gift of Stephen and Sandra Abramson
"All movies are too long. Let's go back and reduce all movies to just the good parts."
John Waters
(Tish can you check the format of our quotations in the designed Mod Con labels ?)
Zapruder is derived from Waters’ 1967 film Eat Your Makeup, his first quasi-narrative cinematic effort. Shot on Waters’ parents’ front lawn with a newly purchased 16mm silent camera, Eat Your Makeup tells the story of a disturbed couple who kidnap three models and force them to eat makeup and “model themselves to death.” In what has become the film’s most infamous sequence, Waters regular Divine imagines herself as Jackie Kennedy, riding in the motorcade through Dealey Plaza. Produced only a few years after the event, Waters’ gender-bending reenactment of the Kennedy assassination was at the time considered especially tasteless and the film was screened only once at a local Baltimore church.
Zapruder’s twenty-four frames is the same number of frames in a single second of sound film. By extracting still images from a longer film, Waters both alludes to the process of editing that structures most films and, at the same time, encourages us to consider how each of us creates our own personal narratives as we perceive, isolate, and interpret the plethora of images that constantly bombard us.

Subject matter
Zapruder is derived from Waters’ 1967 film Eat Your Makeup. The work's twenty-four stills are taken from what has become the film’s most infamous sequence, in which the cross-dressing actor Divine imagines herself as Jackie Kennedy riding in the motorcade through Dealey Plaza.

Physical Description
Twenty-four color photographs mounted in two-part artist's frame with a ninety-degree bend.

Primary Object Classification
Photograph

Primary Object Type
color

Additional Object Classification(s)
Photograph

Collection Area
Photography

Rights
If you are interested in using an image for a publication, please visit http://umma.umich.edu/request-image for more information and to fill out the online Image Rights and Reproductions Request Form.

Keywords
assassinations
fantasy (imagination)
film stills
gender issues
narrative cycles
presidents

5 Related Resources

Zapruder
(Part of: Screen Arts and Cultures, Fall 2009 Project)
TV Culture and Criticism
(Part of 6 Learning Collections)
History of New Media 
(Part of 4 Learning Collections)

& Author Notes

All Rights Reserved

On display

UMMA Gallery Location ➜ FFW, 2nd floor ➜ 218 (Eleanor Noyes Crumpacker)